EBE means = Extra Biological Entity...the following file may or may not
be true.....YOU Decide! Samurai_Writer

>From Don Allen: I found the following file when I was re-organizing my disk
collection. I didn't even know I had this until the other day and sat down and
read the whole thing. I've decided to post it for informational purposes only. I
have *not* received permission from Apogee Publishing Company nor ParaNet to
re-publish it. Other than the removal of the _continuation_ headers to conserve
space, the file is presented intact in 2 parts. FILENAME: EBE.DOC Message #799 - INFO.PARANET Date : 25-Jan-91 14:00 From : Michael Corbin To : All Subject :
EBE #1 Recently, Jerry Clark published the first of three volumes titled "UFOs
in the 1980s," an invaluable research tool containing a host of information on
the who, where and what of UFOlogy. With his kind permission and the kind
permission of Apogee Publishing Company, we are reprinting an article taken from
that book -- Extraterrestrial Biological Entity. In this article, Jerry
culls all of the past history and controversy surrounding the MJ-12 controversy
and other related material that has spewed forth from the extreme side of
UFOlogy representing the ETH such as Lear, Cooper and others. Although this
might be considered by some to be "old news," Jerry's chronology of events shed
a different light on the players that have made up this compendium of scenarios
-- aliens eating humans, genetic experimentation and the gamut of
sensationalistic information that drove Paul Bennewitz to an NBD at the kind
hands of admitted-disinformant, William L. Moore.
EXTRATERRESTRIAL BIOLOGICAL ENTITIES Perhaps the strangest and most convoluted UFO story of the 1980s concerns allegations from
various sources, some of them
individuals connected with military and intelligence agencies,
that the U.S. government not only has communicated with but has
an ongoing relationship with what are
known officially as "extraterrestrial biological entities," or EBEs.
The Emenegger/Sandler Saga: The story begins in 1973, when Robert
Emenegger and Alan Sandler, two
well-connected Los Angeles businessmen, were invited to Norton Air
Force Base in California to discuss a possible
documentary film on advanced research projects. Two military
officials, one the base's head of the Air Force Office of
Special Investigations, the other, the audio- visual director Paul
Shartle, discussed a number of projects. One of them involved UFOs. This one
sounded the most interesting and plans were launched to go ahead with a
film on the subject. Emenegger and Sandler were told of a film
taken at Holloman AFB, New Mexico, in May 1971.
In October 1988, in a national television
broadcast, Shartle would declare that he had seen the 16mm
film showing "three disc-shaped craft. One of the craft
landed and two of them went away." A door opened on the landed
vehicle and three beings emerged. Shartle said, "They were human- size.
They had an odd, gray complexion and a pronounced nose.
They wore tightfitting jump suits, [and] thin headdresses that
appeared to be communication devices, and in their hands
they held a 'translator.' A Holloman base commander and
other Air Force officers went out to meet them" (Howe, 1989).
Emenegger was led to believe he would be given the film for use
in his documentary. He was even taken to Norton and
shown the landing site and the building in which the
spaceship had been stored and others (Buildings 383 and
1382) in which meetings between Air Force
personnel and the aliens had been conducted over the next several
days. According to his sources, the landing had taken place at 6 a.m. The
extraterrestrials were "doctors, professional types." Their
eyes had vertical slits like a cat's and their mouths were thin and
slitlike, with no chins." All that Emenegger was told of what occurred in the
meetings was a single stray "fact": that the military people said they
were monitoring signals from an alien group with which they were
unfamiliar, and did their ET guests know anything about them? The ETs said
no. Emenegger's military sources said he would be given 3200 feet
of film taken of the landing. At the
last minute, however, permission was withdrawn,
although Emenegger and Sandler were encouraged to
describe the Holloman episode as something
hypothetical, something that could happen or might happen in the
future. Emenegger went to Wright-Patterson AFB, where
Project Blue Book had been located until its closing in 1969, to ask Col.
George Weinbrenner one of his military
contacts, what had happened. According to Emenegger's
account, the exchange took place in Weinbrenner's office. The
colonel stood up, walked to a chalkboard and complained in a
loud voice, "That damn MIG 25! Here we're so public with
everything we have. But the Soviets have all kinds of
things we don't know about. We need to know more about the MIG 25!"
Moving to a bookshelf and continuing his monologue about the Russian
jet fighter, he handed Emenegger a copy of J. Allen
Hynek's The UFO Experience (1972), with the author's signature
and dedication to Weinbrenner. "It was like a scene from a Kafka play,"
Emenegger would recall , inferring from the colonel's odd behavior that he was
confirming the reality of the film while
making sure that no one overhearing
the conversation realized that was what he was doing. The
documentary film UFO's Past, Present & Future
(Sandler Institutional Films, Inc.) was released in 1974
along with a paperback book of the same
title.

The Holloman incident is recounted in three pages
(127-29) of the book's "Future" section. Elsewhere, in a
section of photos and illustrations, is an
artist's conception of what one of the Holloman entities looked
like, though it, along with other alien figures, is
described only as being "based on eyewitness
descriptions" (Emenegger, 1974). Emenegger's association with the military
and intelligence he had met while doing the film would continue for years.
At one point in the late 1980s his sources told him that He was about to
be invited to film an interview with a live extraterrestrial in a Southwestern
state, he says, but nothing came of it. The Suffern Story: On
October 7, 1975, a 27-year old carpenter, Robert Suffern, of
Bracebridge, Ontario, got a call from his sister who had seen
a "fiery glow" near his barn and concluded it was on fire. Suffern
drove to the spot and, after determining that there was no problem,
got back on the road. There, he would testify, he encountered a large
disc-shaped object resting in his path. "I was scared," he said. "It was right
there in front of me with no lights and no sign of life." But
even before his car could come to a complete stop, the
object abruptly ascended out of sight. Suffern turned his car around and
decided to head home rather than to his
sister's place, his original intended destination.
At that point a small figure wearing a helmet and a silver-gray suit
stepped in front of the car, causing Suffern to hit the brakes and
skid to a stop. The figure ran into a field. Then, according to Suffern,
"when he got to the fence, he put his hands on a post and went over it
with no effort at all. It was like he was weightless" (UFOIL, n.d.).
Within two days Suffern's report was on the wire
services, and Suffern was besieged by
UFO investigators, journalists, curiosity-seekers,
and others. Suffern, who made no effort to exploit his story
and gave every appearance of believing what he was saying, soon
tired of discussing it. A year later, however, Suffern and his wife
told a Canadian investigator that a month after the encounter,
they were informed that some high-ranking officials wished to
speak with them. Around this time, so they claimed, they
were given thorough examinations by military
doctors. After that an appointment was set up for December 12 and on
that day an Ontario Provincial Police cruiser arrived with
three military officers, one Canadian, two American. They were
carrying books and other documents. In the long conversation that
followed, the officers apologized for the UFO landing, claiming
it was a "mistake" caused by the
malfunctioning of an extraterrestrial spaceship.
The officers produced close-up pictures of UFOs, claiming that
the U.S. and Canadian governments had had intimate knowledge of
aliens since 1943 and were cooperating with them. The officers
even knew the exact dates and times
of two previous but unreported UFO sightings on the
Suffern property. The Sufferns said the officers had
answered all their questions fully and frankly,
but they would not elaborate on what they were told.
Reinterviewed about the matter some months later,
the couple stuck by their story but added few further details.
The investigator, Harry Tokarz, would remark, "Robert
Suffern strikes one as an individual who carefully measures his thoughts.
His sincerity comes through clearly as he slowly
relates his concepts and ideas. His wife, a home-bred country girl,
is quick to air her views and state unequivocally what she believes
to be fact" (CUFORN, 1983). EBEs in South Dakota: On February 9,
1978, a curious document--an apparent carbon copy of an
official U.S. Air Force incident report-arrived at the office
of the National Enquirer in Lantana, Florida. Accompanying the document
was an unsigned letter dated "29 Jan." It read: "The incident stated
in the attached report actually occurred. The Air Force
appointed a special team of individuals to
investigate the incident. I was one of those
individuals. I am still on active duty and so I cannot state my name
at this time. It is not that I do not trust the Enquirer (I sure [sic] you
would treat my name with [sic] confidence but I do not trust others.) The
incident which occurred on 16 Nov. 77, was classified top secret on 2 Dec 77. At
that time I obtained a copy of the original report. I thought at that time that
the Air Force would probably hush the whole thing up, and they
did. The Air Force ordered the silence on 1 Dec 77, after
which, the report was classified. There were 16 pictures taken
at the scene. I do not have access to the pictures at this time" (Pratt,
1984). The report, stamped FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY, purported to
be from the commander of the 44th Missile Security Squadron at
Ellsworth AFB near Rapid City, South Dakota. The incident was described as
a "Helping Hand (security violation)/Covered Wagon
(security violation) at Lima 9 (68th SMSq Area), 7 miles SW of Nisland, SD,
at 2100 hours on 16 Nov. 77." The recipient of the
report was identified as "Paul D. Hinzman, SSgt, USAF,
Comm/Plotter, Wing Security Control." Two security men, Airmen
1st Class Kenneth Jenkins and Wayne E.
Raeke, experienced and reported the
incident, which was investigated by Capt. Larry D.
Stokes and TSgt. Robert E. Stewart. The document told
an incredible story. At 10:59 on the evening of November 16 an alarm
sounded from the Lima Nine missile site. Jenkins and Raeke, at tHe
Lima Launch Control Facility 35 miles away, were dispatched to the
scene. On their arrival Raeke set out to check the rear
fence line. There he spotted a helmeted figure in a
glowing green metallic suit. The figure pointed a weapon at
Raeke's rifle and caused it to disintegrate, burning Raeke's
hands and arms in the process. Raeke summoned Jenkins, who
carried his companion back to their Security Alert
Team vehicle. When Jenkins went to the rear fence line, he
saw two similarly-garbed figures. He ordered them to halt, but when
they ignored his command, he opened fire. His bullets struck
one in the shoulder and the other in the helmet. The figures ran
over a hill and were briefly lost to view. Jenkins pursued them and when
he next saw them, they were entering a
20-foot-in-diameter saucer-shaped object, which shot away over the Horizon.
As Raeke was air-evacuated from
the scene, investigators discovered that the missile's nuclear
components had been stolen. Enquirer reporters suspected a
hoax but when they called Rapid City and Ellsworth to check on the names,
they were surprised to learn that such persons did exist. Moreover,
all were on active duty. The Enquirer launched an
investigation, sending several reporters to Rapid City.
Over the course of the next few days they found that although the
individuals were real, the document inaccurately listed
their job titles, the geography of the
alleged incident was wrong (there was no nearby hill over which
intruders could have run), Raeke had suffered no injuries, he and Jenkins did
not even know each other, and no one (including Rapid City civilian
residents and area ranchers) had heard anything about
such an encounter. As one of the reporters, Bob Pratt,
wrote in a subsequent account, "We
found more than 20 discrepancies or
errors in the report -wrong names, numbers, occupations,
physical layouts and so on. Had the Security Option alert mentioned in the
report taken place, it would have involved all security personnel at the
base and everyone at the base and in Rapid City (Population
45,000 plus) would have known about it." The
Bennewitz Affair: In the late 1970s Paul
Bennewitz, an Albuquerque businessman trained as a physicist, became
convinced that he was monitoring
electromagnetic signals which
extraterrestrials were using to control
persons they had abducted. Bennewitz tried to decode these
signals and believed he was succeeding. At the same time he began to see what
he thought were UFOs maneuvering around the Manzano Nuclear Weapons
Storage Facility and the Coyote Canyon test area, located near
Kirtland AFB, and he filmed them. Bennewitz reported all this to
the Tucson-based Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (APRO), whose
directors were unimpressed, judging Bennewitz to be deluded.
But at Kirtland, Bennewitz's claims, or at
least some of them, were being taken
more seriously. On October 24, 1980, Bennewitz contacted
Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) agent Sgt.
Richard Doty (whose previous tour of duty had been at Ellsworth)
after being referred to him by Maj. Ernest Edwards, head of
base security, and related that he had evidence
that something potentially threatening was going on in the
Manzano Weapons Storage Area. A "Multipurpose Internal OSI Form,"
signed by Maj. Thomas A. Cseh (Commander of the Base Investigative
Detachment), dated October 28, 1980, and
subsequently released under the Freedom of
Information Act, states: "On 26 Oct 80, SA [Special Agent]
Doty, with the assistance of JERRY MILLER, GS-15, Chief, Scientific
Advisor for Air Force Test and Evaluation Center, KAFB , interviewed Dr.
BENNEWITZ at his home in the Four Hills section of Albuquerque,
which is adjacent to the northern boundary of Manzano Base.
(NOTE: MILLER is a former Project Blue Book USAF
Investigator who was assigned to Wright-Patterson AFB
(W-PAFB), OH, with FTD [Foreign Technology Division]. Mr.
MILLER is one of the most knowledgeable and
impartial investigators of Aerial Objects in the southwest.) Dr.
BENNEWITZ has been conducting independent research into Aerial
Phenomena for the last 15 months. Dr. BENNEWITZ also
produced several electronic recording tapes,
allegedly showing high periods of electrical magnetism being
emitted from Manzano/Coyote Canyon area. Dr. BENNEWITZ also produced
several photographs of flying objects taken over the general
Albuquerque area. He has several pieces of electronic
surveillance equipment pointed at Manzano and is
attempting to record high frequency electrical beam pulses.
Dr. BENNEWITZ claims these Aerial Objects produce these
pulses. . . . After analyzing the data collected by Dr.
BENNEWITZ, Mr MILLER related the evidence clearly shows that some type of
unidentified aerial objects were caught on film; however, no conclusions could
be made whether these objects pose a threat to Manzano/Coyote Canyon
areas. Mr MILLER felt the electronical [sic] recording
tapes were inconclusive and could have been
gathered from several conventional sources. No sightings, other than
these, have been reported in the area." On November 10 Bennewitz
was invited to the base to present his findings to a small group of
officers and scientists. Exactly one week later Doty informed Bennewitz that
AFOSI had decided against further consideration of the matter.
Subsequently Doty reported receiving a call from then-New Mexico Sen.
Harrison Schmitt, who wanted to know what AFOSI was planning to
do about Bennewitz's allegations. When informed that no
investigation was planned, Schmitt spoke with Brig. Gen. William
Brooksher of base security. The following July New Mexico's other
senator, Pete Domenici, looked into the matter, meeting briefly with
Doty before dashing off to talk with Bennewitz personally. Domenici
subsequently lost interest and dropped the issue. Bennewitz
was also aware of supposed cattle mutilations being reported
in the western United States. At one point he met a
young mother who told him that one evening in May 1980, after she and
her six-year-old son saw several UFOs in a field and one
approached them, they suffered confusion and disorientation, then a period of
amnesia which lasted as long as four hours. Bennewitz brought the
two to University of Wyoming psychologist R. Leo Sprinkle, who
hypnotized them and got a detailed abduction story from the mother
and a sketchy one from the little boy. Early in the course of
the abduction they observed aliens take a calf aboard the UFO
and mutilate it while it was still alive, removing the
animal's genitals. At one point during
the alleged experience, the mother said, they were taken
via UFO into an underground area which she
believed was in New Mexico. She briefly
escaped her captors and fled into an area where there
were tanks of water. She looked into one of them and saw
body parts such as tongues, hearts and internal organs,
apparently from cattle. But she also observed a human
arm with a hand attached. There was also the "top
of a bald head," apparently from one of the hairless aliens,
but before she could find out for sure, she was dragged
away. The objects in the tank, she said, "horrified me and
made me sick and frightened me to death" (Howe, 1989). Later she wondered
about the other tanks and about their contents. The William
Moore/MJ-12 Maze: Late in the summer of 1979 William L. Moore
had left a teaching job in a small Minnesota town to relocate
in Arizona, where he hoped to pursue a writing career. Moore was deeply
involved in the investigation of an apparent UFO crash in New Mexico in
July 1947, a case he and Charles Berlitz would recount in their The
Roswell Incident the following year. After his move to the Southwest
Moore became close to Coral and James Lorenzen of the
Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (APRO) and in due
course Moore was asked to join the APRO board. The Lorenzens told
him about Bennewitz's claims. Bennewitz, Jim Lorenzen thought, was "prone
to make great leaps of logic on the basis of incomplete data" (Moore,
1989a). The Roswell Incident was published in the summer of 1980
and in September a debate on UFOs at the Smithsonian
Institution was scheduled to take place. Moore set off from his
Arizona home to Washington, D.C., to attend the debate and along the way
promoted his new book on radio and television shows.
According to an account he would give seven years later, an
extraordinary series of events began while he was on this trip.
He had done a radio show in Omaha and was in the station lobby,
suitcase in hand, on his way to catch a plane which was to leave within
the hour when a receptionist asked if he was Mr. Moore. He had a
phone call. The caller was a man who claimed to be
a colonel at nearby Offutt AFB, He said, "We think you're the only
one we've heard who seems to know what he's talking about." He
asked if he and Moore could meet and discuss matters
further. Moore said that since he was leaving town
in the next few minutes, that would not be
possible, though he wrote down the man's phone number.
Moore went on to Washington. On September 8, on his way back, he did a
radio show in Albuquerque. On the way out of the studio the receptionist
told him he had a phone call. The caller,
who identified himself as an individual from nearby
Kirtland AFB, said, "We think you're the only one we've heard about
who seems to know what he's talking about." Moore said, "Where have I
heard that before?" Soon afterwards Moore and the individual he
would call "Falcon" met at a local restaurant. Falcon, later alleged
(though denied by Moore) to be U.S. Air Force Sgt. Richard Doty,
said he would be wearing a red tie. This first meeting would
initiate a long- running relationship between Moore
(and, beginning in 1982, partner Jaime Shandera) and 10
members of a shadowy group said to be connected with military intelligence and
to be opposed to the continuation of the UFO cover-up. The
story that emerged from this interaction goes like this:
The first UFO crash, involving bodies of small,
gray-skinned humanoids, occurred near Corona, New
Mexico, in 1947 (the "Roswell incident"). Two years
later a humanoid was found alive and it was housed at Los
Alamos until its death in the early 1950s. It was
called EBE, after "extraterrestrial biological entity," and it
was the first of three the U.S. government would have in its custody
between then and now. An Air Force captain, now a retired colonel,
was EBE-1's constant companion. At first communication with it was almost
impossible; then a speech device which enabled the being to speak a sort of
English was implanted in its throat. It turned out that EBE-1,
the equivalent of a mechanic on a spaceship, related
what it knew of the nature and purpose of the visitation.
In response to the Roswell incident, MJ-12-the MJ
stands for "Majestic"--as set up by executive
order of President Harry Truman on September 24, 1947.
MJ-12 operates as a policy-making body. Project Aquarius is an
umbrella group in which all the various compartments dealing
with ET-related issues perform their various
functions. Project Sigma
conducts electronic communication with the
extraterrestrials, part of an ongoing contact project
run through the National Security Agency since 1964, following
a landing at Holloman AFB in late April of that year. Nine
extraterrestrial races are visiting the earth. One of these races,
little gray-skinned people from the
third planet surrounding Zeta Reticuli, have been here for
25,000 years and influenced the direction of human evolution.
They also help in the shaping of our religious beliefs. Some
important individuals within the cover-up want it to end and are preparing
the American people for the reality of the alien presence through the
vehicle of popular entertainment, including the films Close Encounters of the
Third Kind, whose climax is a thinly-disguised version of the Holloman landing,
and ET. At CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, there is a
thick book called "The Bible," a compilation of all
the various project reports. According to his own
account, which he would not relate until 1989,
Moore cooperated with his AFOSI
sources-including, prominently, Richard Doty-and provided them
with information. They informed him that
there was considerable interest in Bennewitz.
Moore was made to understand that as his part of the bargain he was
to spy on Bennewitz and also on APRO as well as, in Moore's words, "to a
lesser extent, several other individuals" (Moore, 1989a). He learned that
several government agencies were interested in Bennewitz's activities and
they wanted to inundate him with false
information-disinformation, in intelligence parlance-to
confuse him. Moore says he was not one of those
providing the disinformation, but he knew some of those of who
were, such as Doty. Bennewitz on his own had already
begun to devise a paranoid interpretation of what he thought
he was seeing and hearing, and the disinformation passed on to him built
on that foundation. His sources told him that the U.S. government and
malevolent aliens are in an uneasy alliance to control the planet, that
the aliens are killing and mutilating not only cattle
but human beings, whose organs they need to lengthen their lives,
and that they are even eating human flesh. In
underground bases at government installations in Nevada and
New Mexico human and alien scientists work together on ghastly
experiments, including the creation of soulless androids out of human and
animal body parts. Aliens are abducting as many as one American in
40 and implanting devices which control human behavior. ClA
brainwashing and other control techniques are doing the
same, turning life on earth into a nightmare of
violence and irrationality. It was, as Moore
remarks, "the wildest science fiction scenario
anyone could possibly imagine." But Bennewitz believed it. He
grew ever more obsessed and tried to alert prominent
persons to the imminent threat, showing
photographs which he held showed human-alien activity
in the Kirtland area but which dispassionate observers thought
depicted natural rock formations and other mundane phenomena.
Eventually Bennewitz was hospitalized, but on his
release resumed his activities, which continue
to this day. Soon the ghoulish scenario
would spread into the larger UFO community and beyond and
command a small but committed band of believers. But that
would not happen until the late 1980s and it
would not be Bennewitz who would be responsible for it.
In 1981 the Lorenzens received an anonymous letter from someone
identifying himself as a "USAF Airman assigned to
the 1550th Aircrew Training and Testing Wing at Kirtland AFB." The
"airman" said, "On July 16, 1980, at between 10:30-10:45 A.M.,
Craig R. Weitzel. .. a Civil Air Patrol Cadet from
Dobbins AFB, Ga., visiting Kirtland AFB, NM, observed a dull
metallic colored UFO flying from South to North near Pecos New
Mexico. Pecos has a secret training site for the 1550th Aircrew
Training and Testing Wing, Kirtland AFB, NM. WEITZEL was with ten
other individuals, including USAF active duty
airmen, and all witnessed the sighting. WEITZEL
took some pictures of the object. WEITZEL went closer to
the UFO and observed the UFO land in a
clearing approximately 250 yds, NNW of the training area. WEITZEL observed
an individual dressed in a metallic suit depart the
craft and walk a few feet away. The individual was outside the
craft for just a few minutes. When the individual returned the
craft took off towards the NW." The letter writer said
he had been with Weitzel when the UFO flew overhead, but he
had not been with him to observe the landing. The
letter went on to say that late on the evening of the next day a
tall, dark-featured, black-suited man wearing sunglasses
called on Weitzel at Kirtland. The stranger claimed to be "Mr.
Huck" from Sandia Laboratories, a classified Department of Energy
contractor on the base. Mr. Huck told
Weitzel he had seen something he should not have
seen, a secret aircraft from Los Alamos, and he demanded all
of the photographs. Weitzel replied that he hadn't taken any,
that the photographer was an airman whose name he did not know. "The
individual warned Weitzel not to mention the sighting to anyone or
Weitzel would be in serious trouble," the writer
went on. "After the individual left
Weitzel[']s room, Weitzel wondered how the individual knew of the sighting
because Weitzel didn't report the sighting to anyone. Weitzel became
scared after thinking of the threat the individual made. Weitzel
call [sic] the Kirtland AFB Security Police and reported the
incident to them. They referred the incident to the Air Force
Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI),
which investigates these matters according to the security
police. A Mr. Dody [sic], a special agent with OSI, spoke with
Weitzel and took a report. Mr. Dody [sic] also obtained all
the photographs of the UFO. Dody [sic] told Weitzel
he would look into the matter. That was the last anyone
heard of the incident." But that was not all the correspondent had
to say. He added, "I have every reason to beleive [sic]
the USAF is covering up something. I spent a lot
of time looking into this matter and I know there is more to
it than the USAF will say. I have heard rumors, but serious
rumors here at Kirtland that the USAF has a crashed UFO stored in the
Manzano Storage area, which is located in a remote area of Kirtland AFB.
This area is heavily guarded by USAF Security. I have spoke [sic] with two
employees of Sandia Laboratories, who also store classified
objects in Manzano, and they told me that Sandia has examined
several UFO's during the last 20 years. One that crashed near
Roswell NM in the late 50's was examined by Sandia scientists.
That craft is still being store [sic] in Manzano.
"I have reason to beleive [sic] OSI is conducting a very secret
investigation into UFO sightings. OSI took over when Project Blue Book
was closed. I was told this by my commander, COL
Bruce Purvine. COL Purvine also told me that the investigation was
so secret that most employees of OSI doesn't [sic] even know it. But COL
Purvine told me that Kirtland AFB, AFOSI District 17 has a special
secret detachment that investigates sightings around this area. They have
also investigated the cattle mutilations in New Mexico."